Batman Begins

Back in 1989 when the orig­i­nal Bat­man film came out me and my whole gang of friends went to see the film open­ing day. It was sum­mer and we’d hit the North­park I and II in antic­i­pa­tion of see­ing Bat­man. I, per­son­ally, was stoked, and we had this goofy thing that we were all going to hold hands until we saw Bat­man on screen.

We didn’t have to wait long for­tu­nately, or my ADD addled mind may not have stayed in phys­i­cal form. At the time I really liked Tim Burton’s take on Bruce Wayne/Batman, but I don’t think its aged well. It’s too flashy, too neony (is that a word?), too car­toony and the whole Prince score thing left me a lit­tle desen­si­tized to the film. Also, who ok-d the killing of the best bad guy you’ve got from your canon in the first film? Unless Jack Nichol­son was only con­tracted for one film it was an idi­otic move that could have fed sequels for years.

Killing off the Joker led to a down­ward spi­ral of lesser and lesser bad guys (Bane, Poi­son Ivy, Two Face), until we hit rock bot­tom with the embar­rass­ing Arnold Schwarzeneg­ger as Dr. Freeze (“Adam and Evil!”). George Clooney scratch­ing old-school style on the Batmobile’s CD player, Chris O’Donnell’s inces­sant com­plain­ing and whin­ing. Blah, blah, blah. I’m sure that dur­ing Bat­man For­ever (wasn’t that a dou­ble album by Queen in 1974?) I prayed “make it end, just make it end, dear lord.”

Star­ring:
Chris­t­ian Bale, Michael Caine, Liam Nee­son, Katie Holmes, Gary Old­man, Mor­gan Free­man, Tom Wilkin­son, Rut­ger Hauer, Ken Watan­abe
Directed By:
Christo­pher Nolan
Release Date:
June 15th, 2005
MPAA Rat­ing:
PG-13 for intense action vio­lence, dis­turb­ing images and some the­matic ele­ments.
Dis­trib­u­tors:
Warner Bros. Pic­tures Dis­tri­b­u­tion
3.5 Star

And now all of that garbage that came before has been wiped from my mem­ory hard drive, washed down into the sewer sys­tem of the new, grit­tier, more real-world Gotham in Christo­pher Nolan’s new film Bat­man Begins. Gotham is a real city now, not some Tokyoesque-city-of-lights car­toon like in the first film. Wayne Manor is A MANOR where peo­ple who loved each other lived and played and watched out for one another. Bat­man has been made real finally, not a car­toon char­ac­ter that sprang forth from some MTV-addicted com­mer­cial director’s brain with flashy style and bright lights and thun­der­ing bass. What we’ve had made for us is the story of Bat­man, with his quirks and faults and guilt and vic­to­ries; he’s a per­sonas well as an icon.

It seems as if this take on Bruce Wayne’s alter ego was pre­or­dained; every­one in the film is as whom they should be. Michael Caine is Alfred, Bruce’s con­fi­dant and But­ler. Gary Old­man is Cap­tain, then Lieu­tenant, Gor­don. Cil­lian Mur­phy is creepy as Dr. Johnathan Crane, mag­is­trate of Arkham Asy­lum and the future Scare­crow. The other play­ers (Mor­gan Free­man, Tom Wilkin­son, Liam Nee­son, Ken Watan­abe, Katie Holmes, et al) do good jobs, a com­bi­na­tion of both fine act­ing and an excel­lent direc­tor pulling good per­for­mances out of them. Of them I enjoyed Free­man the most for his jolly per­for­mance. He forks away from his Mil­lion Dol­lar Baby role as a wealthy man put into a dead-end job but who loves what he does nonetheless.

So, lastly, is Chris­t­ian Bale any good? Or is he going to be another Val Kilmer? I didn’t have high hopes when I went in. I liked him, as a teen, in Empire of the Sun, but hadn’t had a lot of inter­est in see­ing him in any­thing else since that film. He did a bunch of films I never saw and then he was in Amer­i­can Psy­cho, a film I never wanted to see based on a thor­oughly rep­re­hen­si­ble and revolt­ing book. Then he did some stuff I wanted to see but never got around to (The Machin­ist and Equi­lib­rium). Will I see them now, based on his per­for­mance in this film? Yes. The man nails it. He’s brood­ing and even funny some­times. I was impressed by him. He goes from a Chi­nese prison camp at his low­est to sav­ing the city that his par­ents attempted to save. Along the way the loner makes some valu­able allies as well as some ter­ri­fy­ing ene­mies, but with the panache that some­one raised in wealth would have been groomed to have. Of the pre-Nolan Bat­mans, Michael Keaton was my favorite, mostly because I didn’t feel he was as wooden as his fol­low­ers. I liked him in a Connery-vs.-Moore kind of way. Keaton is now #2. Bale owns the role.

So, do you think I liked it?

Ha.

15. June 2005 by Glenn Vance
Categories: Movie Reviews | Leave a comment

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